학과별 학술자료 가이드: Research Guides

Research Guide는 도서관에서 소장하고 있는 다양한 학술 자료 중 학부 또는 학과별로 학습 및 연구 활동에 참고할 수 있는 자료를 소개하고 이용 방법을 안내하는 “온라인 학술자료 가이드”입니다.

Turnitin: Academic Plagiarism Detector

What is Turnitin?

Turnitin is an online tool created in 1996 by a group of professors from the University of California, Berkeley. This tool allows professors or students to upload papers to the Turnitin database.

How does Turnitin work?

The student’s paper matched against the database of web pages, paper mill essays, and other student papers submitted online. Turnitin then creates an “originality report” that highlights any passages from the paper that might not be authentic, and lists web sites and other resources with content that matches that in the paper.

Getting Started:

Please see the Turnitin Guide page in the Library website for more details if you are instructor or staff.

Here is basic information to use Turnitin.

  1. Visit the Turnitin
  2. Create a new account (Select ‘Student’)
    1. Enter following information and set your account: Class ID ‘5402739’, Class enrollment key ‘unist1’
  3. To self-check: Click the ‘Self Check’ class on your class list → Submit your paper (Please refer to the attached file for detailed guides)

 

For any questions, contact

☎052-217-1117 for Plagiarism Checking for Thesis/Dissertation: Education Affairs Team

☎052-217-1173 for Research Ethics: Research Promotion Team

☎052-217-1405 for How to Use ‘Turnitin’ Program: Library

Download Use Guide (Kor)

Download Use Guide (Eng)

Special Lecture

How to Write a Great Research Paper,
and Get it Accepted by a Good Journal
  • Contents
    • The best way of structuring your paper and choosing the most appropriate journal to submt your paper
    • How editor and publishers think and what they expect
    • How the peer review process works
    • Publishing ethics, plagiarism and duplicate publishing
  • Speaker: Anthony Newman (Publisher, Life Science Department, Elsevier)

special_lecture_on_publishing_journal_articles_material

EndNote

EndNote is a software package designed to help you to organize citations and create a bibliography.

EndNote allows you to:

  • Search for citations in databases(such as ‘PubMed’) and library catalogs.
  • Retrieve relevant citations(from databases like ‘Web of Science’) and import them into EndNote.
  • Build your bibliography and organize your citations.

The UNIST Library sponsors a site license to EndNote. All UNIST members can download and install the program from UNIST Portal;

UNIST Portal > (bottom of the page) Software Guide > Software List > Educational Software > EndNote

* The Portal’s Software Guide page is accessible only in the UNIST IP range.

 

Using EndNote:

Useful Resources:

Zotero

Zotero is a free citation management software plug in for Mozilla Firefox & Chrome/Safari.

It enables users to collect, manage, and cite research from all types of sources. It is easy to use, lives in your web browser where you do your work, and it is free! Zotero allows you to attach pdfs, notes, images and screenshots to your citations, to organize them into collections for different projects, and to create bibliographies using Word or OpenOffice.

Zotero detects when a book, article, or other resource is being viewed and, with a mouse click, finds and saves the full reference information to a local file. If the source is an online article or web page, Zotero can optionally store a local copy of the source. Users can then add notes, tags, and their own metadata through the in-browser interface. Selections of the local reference library data can later be exported as formatted bibliographies.

Because it is a Firefox add-on, it automatically updates itself periodically to work with new online sources and new bibliographic styles.

For more help, see this official Zotero Guide.

Download Zotero 5.0 !!

Citing Medicine: The NLM Style Guide

Citing Medicine (2007 – ) updates and supersedes versions of the original Recommended Formats that were available as PDFs in 2007.

This publication is updated periodically. Join the CITINGMED LISTSERV for alerts to additions and changes. You may view and download the publication at no charge.

Citing Medicine provides instructions and examples for formatting citations to different types of both published and unpublished material, ranging from traditional journal articles and books to newer electronic formats such as Internet journals, Web pages, and blog posts.

If all you need are a few examples of citations, the NLM has a page with sample references you may find easier to use.

This is the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) Recommendations for the Conduct, Reporting, Editing and Publication of Scholarly Work in Medical Journals: Sample References page with over 50 examples for more commonly cited types of materials.